From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Title: WSF: Economic globalization = violence against women


From "WCC Media" <Media@wcc-coe.org>
Date Thu, 22 Jan 2004 14:58:50 +0100

World Council of Churches 7 Press Update
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - 22/01/2004 - pu-04-05

 Economic globalization equals violence against women
 WSF seminar asks for just, sustainable and caring trade

Cf. WCC Press Feature, Feat-04-03, of 21 January 2004
Cf. WCC Press Update, Up-04-04, of 21 January 2004

Women's roles in a globalized world, the subject of a seminar at the Mumbai
World Social Forum, drew a sizeable crowd, mainly women. The 20 January
seminar was organized by the World Council of Churches (WCC) with the World
Young Women's Christian Association and Church World Service. Coming down
heavily on uncaring treatment of women, the speakers also suggested ways to
improve their plight.

Women panelists from India, Pakistan, Thailand and Uganda discussed the
impact in their countries of trade liberalization on women.

Whether it is a garments industry worker in a sweatshop in India, a migrant
woman working in a shrimp processing factory in Pakistan, a sex worker in
Thailand or a cotton picker in Uganda, the experience of poor women with
trade liberalization has been similar everywhere in the South.

As a result of trade liberalization, women's underpaid and unpaid - caring
or domestic - labour is exploited, and their access to basic needs like
food, shelter, education and health is eroded. Moreover, the panelists
emphasized, economic globalization - as manifested in trade liberalization
- cannot be considered separately from patriarchy.

According to Vibhuti Patel, a reader at Bombay University, there are no
short-term solutions. "Survival has become the issue, and women have to do
a round-the-clock job to sustain themselves and their families," she said.

Discussing the relationship between the formal and the informal economy,
Patel explained that in India, 96% of urban and rural poor women work in
the informal sector, which has a high degree of labour redundancy and
obsolescence. These women have little control over their work, which is
temporary, routine and monotonous, and no chance for upward mobility.

Azra Sayeed from Roots for Equity at the University of Karachi, Pakistan,
described the plight of Bangladeshi migrant women in Pakistan, who are
harassed physically, economically and mentally. "I tell you that in any
rural area in Pakistan, a simple task like washing clothes becomes an
enormous effort," she said.

For Sayeed, "Economic globalization is nothing but capitalism," to which
Pakistan has fallen prey. "We have dropped a food economy and, instead,
adopted a cash crop economy," she reported. Further, "The violence that
women face every day makes the September 11 attack pale in comparison. We
have failed to adequately address this violence, and that is the reason it
is still prevalent," she said.

Vibhuti Patel pointed out that in India, scarcity of fuel, water and food
grains as a result of commercialization has taken a heavy toll on women's
health. Urban poor women have to take two or three jobs to supplement their
income to meet their families' basic survival needs. The burgeoning sex
trade has made two million sex workers potential carriers of HIV, STDs, and
AIDS.

WCC consultant on women and economy Athena Peralta from the Philippines,
who coordinated the panel, said that under the weight of poverty and
material needs, women's rights are being totally neglected. "Because of
economic globalization, women all across the globe are being deprived of
food, shelter, education, health and dignified employment. If globalization
has affected a 'sector', then it is women," Peralta said.

Lapapan Supamanta from the Thailand-based International Network of Engaged
Buddhists pointed out that Buddhism forbids five trades: weapons,
slaughterhouses, trading humans, alcohol and poison. "But all five are
profit-making, and globalization has put an end to this Buddhist
philosophy," she reported.

And noting that "In Africa, all the agricultural work is done by women,"
Uganda-based Elizabeth Eilor put the onus for the worsening conditions of
Africa's women on trade. "They produce for the markets of Europe and the
US. But their wages bear no relation to the prices at which their produce
is sold on those markets," she said.

Moving beyond analysis of the current situation, the panelists brought
proposals for a wide range of strategies and interventions at different
levels, including organic farming, promotion and implementation of labour
standards, disengagement from the World Trade Organization, and
strengthening of social movements at local, national and global levels.

Women have resisted and challenged corporate forces that threaten their
land, livelihood and communities. "We aim to work for transformation by
building networks of women," Peralta said.

The importance of spirituality, of ethics, of values - whatever the faith -
was also emphasized. These, the panelists said, should be the driving force
for much-needed changes in the global trading system.

Information and photos on the activities of the World Council of Churches
at the WSF in are available on our website:
http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/jpc/wsf-2004-e.html (in English)
http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/jpc/wsf-2004-f.html (en frangais)
http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/jpc/wsf-2004-g.html (auf Deutsch)
http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/jpc/wsf-2004-s.html (en espaqol)

For more information contact:
	 Media Relations Office
 tel: (+41 22) 791 64 21 / (+41 22) 791 61 53
 e-mail:media@wcc-coe.org 
 http://www.wcc-coe.org 

 The World Council of Churches is a fellowship of churches, now 342, in
 more than 120 countries in all continents from virtually all Christian
 traditions. The Roman Catholic Church is not a member church but works
 cooperatively with the WCC. The highest governing body is the assembly,
 which meets approximately every seven years. The WCC was formally
 inaugurated in 1948 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Its staff is headed by
 general secretary Samuel Kobia from the Methodist church in Kenya.


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